Page 26 - INDONESIAN ISLAMIC CULTURE IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
P. 26

theological issue, the questions came up what power system should be                                                   Saghir, a cleric who preferred to preach in an atmosphere of peace.  It was
                                                                                                                                                                                                                     27
                                  adopted to regulate social life and whether the political system and the                                               on the basis of the principle saying “People who do not pray and who refuse
                                  kingdom were in line with Islamic teachings? A good look at history was in                                             to practice the Qur’an carefully lose the right to life and to their property,
                                                                                                                                                                                           28
                                  order. The fall of Malacca had provided opportunities to Aceh Darussalam                                               according to the sacred books of fiqh.”  In 1821, the Dutch intervened and
                                  and other Islamic power centers, but as al-Raniri narrated in his work                                                 the Padri War (the second stage) ended in 1837 and Minangkabau land fell
                                  Bustanus Salatin, the sultanate experienced political stability and prosperity                                         into the hands of the Dutch. But, while this matrilineal ethnic group started
                                  under the reign of Sultan Iskandar Muda.                                                                               to formulate its identity --”Adat bersendi syarak. Syarak bersendi kitabullah”
                                                                                                                                                         (Traditions hinges on the Sharia, and the Sharia hinges on the Scripture
                                  Could Iskandar Muda and his successors have learned from a text that                                                   of God), the legends began to generate their Islamic spirited traditional
                                  contained a theory on the state that had been generated before he                                                      history. The cultural and historical reasons why the Minangkabau remained
                                  ascended the throne? A few years before the Sultan came into powers in                                                 its matrilineal kinship system, whereas the Islamic inheritance system is
                                  1602, Bukhari al-Jauhari had introduced the Tajus-Salatin,  which may be                                               patrilineal were also formulated. Since the mid-19  century many debates
                                                                                     26
                                                                                                                                                                                                     th
                                  regarded as the first text on political theory in the Malay world. This text not                                       took place in Minangkabau about mystical orders, while the process towards
                                  only adopted the concept and attitude of justice as the foundation of ethics                                           religious orthodoxy accelerated as well. At the beginning of the 20  century,
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   th
                                  and the wisdom of power but also saw it as a political strategy. The wisdom                                            the Minangkabau had replaced Palembang and Penyengat Island (Riau) as
                                  that sparks from the Malay text caused it to have been repeatedly translated                                           the center of religious thought. “Islamic modernism”, which was near to the
                                  into Javanese. Moreover, history noted also that the Tajus Salatin was the                                             “kaum muda” (lit. young people) movement aspired to become more and
                                  favorite reading of Mangkubumi (Hamengkubuwono I) and Diponegoro. It                                                   more involved in the “developed world” as well.
                                                                                                                                                                                                  29
                                  is thus interesting to learn that in the mid-19  century, Abdullah Abdul Kadir                                         Indeed, since the end of the 18  and especially in the beginning of the 19
                                                                        th
                                                                                                                                                                                                                           th
                                                                                                                                                                                     th
                                  Munsyi, commonly considered a “barrier figure” between traditional Malay                                               century when the penetration of foreign power had become increasingly
                                  and “modern” Indonesian literature, said that the weakness of the Malay                                                widespread, religious thinking accelerated. The total number of Indonesian
                                  sultans (in the Peninsula) was the fact they had no longer understood the                                              pilgrims and Muslims who even resided in the Holy Land increased as
                                  Tajus Salatin’s messages.                                                                                              well. The number of Muslims connected in networks of teachers and
                                  That was towards the end of the 18  century. At the start of the 19  century                                           students and religious scholars in the centers of Islamic studies also
                                                                                            th
                                                                 th
                                  tens or even hundreds of Islamic manuscripts in Malay, Javanese and other                                              rose, as was the number of surau, meunasa, pesantren and madrasah
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  th
                                                                                                                                                                                     th
                                  languages in the archipelago were written. Different schools and religious                                             in the country. Since the late 18  century and especially the 19  century
                                  thinking tendencies were introduced. In this atmosphere debates were                                                   Palembang presented itself as one of the centers of Islamic thinking
                                  common even severe ones especially when they focused on the relationship                                               together with Patani in the Malay peninsula, now part of Thailand. Sultan
                                  between God and His creatures. The manuscript known as keropak Ferrara                                                 Badaruddin II of Palembang was not only a very anti-Dutch king but
                                                                                                                                                         also a poet and thinker. Residing in Arabia and usually writing in Arabic,
                                  (17  century), because it is stored in the library of Ferrara in Italy, shows a                                        Sheikh al-Palimbani sent his Islamic thoughts to his homeland. In the Aceh
                                    th
                                  “fundamentalist” tendency, but the Serat Dharmagandul (20  century) which                                              War (1872-1904), Aceh, which saw itself as the “veranda of Mecca”, still
                                                                                       th
                                  is not “fundamentalist” at all. So, we may understand also why the integrity                                           managed to generate a story about the holy war, but no longer written in
                                  of the Islamic community is problematic.                                                                               Malay but in the Acehnese language. Towards the end of the 19  century,
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  th
                                  It is not strange that the so-called ‘fundamentalist’ tendency showed its most                                         Penyengat Island (Riau) also came up as a center for the production of
                                  radical form in Minangkabau in the early of the 19  century during what is                                             Islamic manuscripts. One might even say that in Penyengat, the palace of
                                                                              th
                                  called the first phase of the “Padri War” (1803-1821). It was told that at that                                        the Raja Muda of the Sultanate of Johor-Riau had become the “capital” of
                                  time the supporters of this movement had launched an action of war that                                                27.  Sjech Djilal-eddin, Verhaal van de aanvang der Padri onlusten op Sumatra, ed. Dr. J.J. de
                                  was no longer a “war of throwing stones” at the village borders. A war of                                              Hollander, Leiden, 1837.
                                  conquest had broken out. “So it was called sabilillah, (lit. the way of God to                                         28.  S.A. Steyn Parve’, “Kaum Padari (Padri) di Padang Darat Pulau Sumatra” (1885) its
                                                                                                                                                         translation in Taufik Abdullah (ed.) Sejarah Lokal di Indonesia, Yogyakarta: UGM University
                                  denote the Holy War), so that its legal status was clearly valid,” wrote Faqih                                         Press, 1985.
                                  26.  Taufik Abdullah, “ The Formation of a Political Tradition in the Malay World”, in Anthony                         29.  Taufik Abdullah, “Modernization in the Minangkabau World: West Sumatra in the Early
                                  Reid (ed.), The Making of an Islamic Political Discourse in Southeast Asia, Clayton, Victoria:                         Decades of the Twentieth Century” in Claire Holt et al. (editors), Ithaca and London: Cornell
                                  Centre for Southeast Asian Studies, Monash University, 1993, 35-58.                                                    University Press, 1972, 179-245.



                 16   Indonesian Islamic Culture in Historical Perspectives                                                                                                                    Indonesian Islamic Culture in Historical Perspectives  17
   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31